Thousands Rally at Hyatt to Support Teachers, Challenge Penny Pritzker

More than 5,000 supporters of Chicago's teachers rallied and picketed outside the Hyatt Regency this afternoon before marching down Michigan Ave. in a spectacular show of solidarity with the Chicago Teachers Union on the fourth day of the strike.

The protesters had a strong message for Penny Pritzker, the billionaire member of the Chicago Board of Education whose family owns the Hyatt: taxpayer funds are going to your hotel chain while our schools are crumbling, and that is unacceptable.

Marchers included members of the Grassroots Collaborative, Action Now, the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, community leaders from organizations all across Chicago, and teachers representing schools from around the city.

"We're not in a budget crisis – we're in a crisis of priorities," said Regis Banks, a member of SEIU Local 73 who is married to a CPS teacher. "While Penny Pritzker will benefit from the use of our tax money for her hotel chain, 160 schools still don't have libraries, and 150 those schools are in brown and black neighborhoods."

During Pritzker's tenure on the Board of Education, she has allowed hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to be siphoned from CPS into the TIF program. Analysis from the Chicago Reporterand Chicago Reader indicate TIF funds mostly benefit downtown Chicago and neglect struggling neighborhoods.

"I am not pleased to see how the teachers are being disrespected by our city's elected officials and CPS board members like Penny Pritzker," said Will Longwe, a student at Northeastern Illinois University and a member of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC).

"Instead of spending millions of TIF dollars on our students," said Longwe, "the Board would rather spend TIF money on building new hotels like the Hyatt to line the pockets of their friends."

Mayor Emanuel's priorities sacrifice the education of Chicago's students in order to dole out money to politically connected groups and big corporations. Neighborhood residents understand that the same interests that create bad education outcomes create bad economic conditions in our neighborhoods.

"Not only is the Mayor taking our tax dollars and giving them to millionaires, he's letting those millionaires decide what's best for our children," said Charles Brown, a retired Chicago police officer and a member of Action Now. "That's not right!"

"We are saying to the Mayor: give our tax dollars to schools, not millionaires! Give our teachers a fair contract and give our children good schools with equal resources!"

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license. It may not be reproduced in any form without permission or license from the source.

Thousands Rally at Hyatt to Support Teachers, Challenge Penny Pritzker

More than 5,000 supporters of Chicago's teachers rallied and picketed outside the Hyatt Regency this afternoon before marching down Michigan Ave. in a spectacular show of solidarity with the Chicago Teachers Union on the fourth day of the strike.

The protesters had a strong message for Penny Pritzker, the billionaire member of the Chicago Board of Education whose family owns the Hyatt: taxpayer funds are going to your hotel chain while our schools are crumbling, and that is unacceptable.

Marchers included members of the Grassroots Collaborative, Action Now, the Brighton Park Neighborhood Council, community leaders from organizations all across Chicago, and teachers representing schools from around the city.

"We're not in a budget crisis – we're in a crisis of priorities," said Regis Banks, a member of SEIU Local 73 who is married to a CPS teacher. "While Penny Pritzker will benefit from the use of our tax money for her hotel chain, 160 schools still don't have libraries, and 150 those schools are in brown and black neighborhoods."

During Pritzker's tenure on the Board of Education, she has allowed hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars to be siphoned from CPS into the TIF program. Analysis from the Chicago Reporterand Chicago Reader indicate TIF funds mostly benefit downtown Chicago and neglect struggling neighborhoods.

"I am not pleased to see how the teachers are being disrespected by our city's elected officials and CPS board members like Penny Pritzker," said Will Longwe, a student at Northeastern Illinois University and a member of the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC).

"Instead of spending millions of TIF dollars on our students," said Longwe, "the Board would rather spend TIF money on building new hotels like the Hyatt to line the pockets of their friends."

Mayor Emanuel's priorities sacrifice the education of Chicago's students in order to dole out money to politically connected groups and big corporations. Neighborhood residents understand that the same interests that create bad education outcomes create bad economic conditions in our neighborhoods.

"Not only is the Mayor taking our tax dollars and giving them to millionaires, he's letting those millionaires decide what's best for our children," said Charles Brown, a retired Chicago police officer and a member of Action Now. "That's not right!"

"We are saying to the Mayor: give our tax dollars to schools, not millionaires! Give our teachers a fair contract and give our children good schools with equal resources!"

This piece was reprinted by Truthout with permission or license. It may not be reproduced in any form without permission or license from the source.